Title: Latino%20Immigrants%20and%20Refugees%20%20by:%20Andria%20Henrie
1Latino Immigrants and RefugeesbyAndria
Henrie
2Introduction
- As part of my presentation I am going to have you
watch this slide show as if you are taking a high
school history class. You will read in the notes
section exactly what I would say to my class. - My lesson plan
- Welcome and instructions
- Note taking from power point presentation
- After taking notes start
- Episode 1 Foreigners in their own land PBS Video
Latino Americans
3A look at Latino's in history
- Many people have this popular vision of Latinos
as people who arrived the day before yesterday.
But when you think about the first European
settlement in what would become the United
States, it's St. Augustine, in 1565. That
predates Jamestown in 1607, by almost 40 years.
The first European language spoken, in what would
become the United States, it's Spanish. - Vicki Ruiz, Chicano Scholar and historian.
- Foreigners in their own land, Latino Americans
- PBS Special Latino Americans Episode 1
4Vaqueras/Cowgirls
- Cowgirls/Vaqueras.
- Circa early 1900s. Courtesy
- of Ocampo Family Collection.
- Department of archives and manuscripts,
- Arizona State University, Tempe.
5Famous Latino/Latina Voices
- Apolinaria Lorenana
- Captain Nepomuceno Seguin
- Mariano Vallejo
- Carlos Juan Finlay
6Apolinaria Lorenzana (La Beata, the Pious one)
1790-1884
- Apolinaria was seven years old and an orphan when
sent by the Spanish Colonial Government of Mexico
to help populate to the farthest reaches of it's
American Empire. Apolinaria has said that when
the group of twenty two orphan girls reached the
capital at Monterey, the government gave them all
away like puppies to the local residents. All of
the orphans were given the last name Lorenzana,
which was the last name of their benefactor the
Arch Bishop of Toledo. Alpolinaria later became
known as Apolinaria la Cuna. By the time that she
had settle in Montery the Spanish had dominated
the New World for over three centuries. By 1808,
Apolinaria had reached her teenage years and
brought to Mission, San Diego, it was the first
Mission founded by Spanish Priests. As a young
child in Mexico she was taught to read, however
she had always wanted to learn to write. When she
was a young girl she taught herself to write by
copying letters from various books. She would
practice on any piece of paper she could find,
even old cigarette wrappings. - She was largely responsible of a school owned by
a Californio widow's where children were taught
various skills, such as reading, writing, cooking
and sewing. Apolinaria never married, but was a
god parent to numerous children. - Apolinaria Lorenzana
- (La Beata, the Pious one) 1790-1884
- Page 2
7Apolinaria Lorenzana
-
- Apolinaria was the recipient of two government
land grants, Santa Clara de Jamacha in 1840 and
Buena Esperanza de los Coches in 1843. She was a
sponsor to close to 200 children both
Californio's and Indian children. She was given
quite a few responsibilities from teacher,
seamstress, supervising the sick, training women
to wash and sew the church linens. She had the
authority to select goods that were not included
on lists from the missionaries. She also played a
role in helping to transform the indigenous
population of San Diego area into Spanish
subjects. One of her greatest grievance was
associated with the arrival of US Troops. Not
only was she a witness to American invasion but
she also suffered the fate of many Californios as
a consequence of American domination, she had
lost her land. - At the end of her life, she was nearly blind and
knew she didn't have much time left, Apolinaria
shared her memories with Thomas Savage an
American Historian. In the end of her life she
was blind, penniless and a charge of the country.
She is remembered as a true example of the high
level of authority and respect achieved by some
mixed-race women of the Caliornia Frontier. - Lorenzana, Apolinaria, 1878. Memories de dona
Apolinaria Lorenzana La Beata dictadas por ella
en Sanda Barbara en marzo de 1878 a Thomas
Savage, Bancroft Library.
8Captain Juan Nepomuceno Seguin 1806-1890
- Juan Seguín was born in San Antonio, and married
the daughter of one of the area's wealthiest
ranching families. They had ten children. He held
a variety of regional political positions until
becoming involved in the military, supporting the
Federalist government in 1835. - Seguín was a strong supporter of the federalist
principles which Santa Anna betrayed. A man more
of action than words, he organized a company of
Tejano soldiers that would play an invaluable
role in the Texan cause. Seguín's Tejano unit
fought bravely at the Battle of San Jacinto, and
followed the defeated Centralist to the Rio
Grande, ensuring their departure. - A thoughtful and literate man, Seguín kept
careful memoirs of the events at San Jacinto. In
the Personal Memoirs of John N. Seguín, he
recalled the gallantry and passion with which his
unit fought. Indeed, the service of Tejano troops
was indispensable throughout the revolution. - Seguín served his country in a number of
political roles including Congressman and
Senator, and as the Mayor of San Antonio (two
consecutive terms). Caught in escalating tensions
between Mexican and Anglo Texans, he was
eventually incriminated in a Mexican plot to
re-take San Antonio. - He fled his beloved homeland for Mexico where he
tried to build a new life for his family. During
the Mexican War, he was forced by the Mexican
government to take up arms against the United
States. He returned to Texas as soon as possible,
where he continued his political service. - Seguín died in Nuevo Laredo in 1890. His remains
were returned to Texas in 1974, and buried at
Seguin, the town named in his honor. - "San Jancinto Museum of History." San Jacinto
Museum of History. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Mar. 2014.
9Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, 1807-1890
- If he was not actually the founder of
California's diversity, Vallejo was certainly
one of it's chief architects
July 4, 1807. The eighth of thirteen children.
1822 - 1826. Vallejo served as personal secretary
to Governor Arguello entered military service as
a cadet at Monterey and became a member of the
territorial legislature. 1829. Vallejo defeated
a large force of Miwok Indians at Indian Mission
Estanislao 1832. He married Francisca Benicia
Carrillo after waiting two years for official
approval. They were to become the parents of 16
children and at least two adopted children
(Vallejo's illegitimate children). His land
acreage (175,000 acres) was comprised of gifts,
purchases, and awards for services or debts owned
him. 1833. Vallejo became Military Commandant
of the San Francisco Presidio "Sonoma State
University." Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo North
Bay Regional Special Collections SSU
Library. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Mar. 2014.
10Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, 1807-1890
"Sonoma State University." Mariano
Guadalupe Vallejo North Bay Regional
Special Collections SSU Library. N.p., n.d.
Web. 16 Mar. 2014.
- 1834. At his own expense, he outfitted and fed
the Mexican troops at Sonoma for the next ten
years. He began building his new home, La Casa
Grande, on the Sonoma plaza - 1835. Vallejo became director of colonization
(the only person empowered to grant land) in the
Northern frontier.
June 10, 1846. Bear Flag Revolt. Vallejo was
arrested in his own home by American
frontiersmen. After signing articles of
capitulation, Mariano and his brother Salvador
(and others) were jailed for two months at
Sutter's Fort. The Bear Flag was raised at
Sonoma, signifying the separate Republic of
California. Less than a month later it was
replaced with the Stars and Stripes. Vallejo's
health was seriously jeopardized during
imprisonment and much of his property stolen.
11Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, 1807-1890
- 1849. Vallejo was a delegate to the state
constitutional convention and elected state
senator. At the convention he promoted
permitting Indians to vote, making slavery
illegal in California, allowing wives to hold
separate property, both real and personal. - Vallejo became an honored guest or speaker at
most public events but declined an offer to run
for Lt. Governor he visited native Californios
and collected their reminiscences for Hubert H.
Bancroft he learned sign language so that he
could communicate with students at a school for
the handicapped and he commissioned artists,
such as, Oriana Day, to depict California history
and the mission era. - Bottom left hand photo is Vallejo with his
daughters.
Bottom Right hand photo is Vallejo with wife
Francisca Benicia Carrillo de Vallejo. - "Sonoma State University." Mariano Guadalupe
Vallejo North Bay Regional Special
Collections SSU Library. N.p., n.d. Web. 16
Mar. 2014.
12Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, 1807-1890If he was
not actually the founder of California's
diversity, Vallejo was certainly one of it's
chief architects
1855. Vallejo is granted only 48,700 of the
117,875 in claims against the US government for
damages incurred during the war with Mexico.
Meanwhile his lands were occupied by squatters,
some milking his cows in the middle of the night!
To make financial ends meet, his wife, Francisca
sold produce to local hotel. Most income would
come from the water company that supplied
Sonoma. 1866. Vallejo lost ownership of his home
in Sonoma and had to pay rent to remain. Several
years later, son-in-law John Frisbie, Vallejo's
power of attorney and manager of Vallejo's funds,
purchased Lachryma Montis and deeded it to
Francisca. 1867. Vallejo's former home, La Casa
Grande, burned to the ground, taking with it his
original five-volume manuscript, History of
California . January 18, 1890. Vallejo died at
Sonoma. His only remaining property was his home.
"Sonoma State University." Mariano Guadalupe
Vallejo North Bay Regional Special
Collections SSU Library. N.p., n.d. Web. 16
Mar. 2014.
- Detail from a 19th century lithograph showing
Lachryma Montis. (Bancroft Library, University of
California Berkeley) - 1850's. Vallejo donated a five square mile tract
of land for development of a port at Benicia and
donated 156 acres for a state capitol at Vallejo
(originally proposed to be named "Eureka"). He
offered 370,000 for construction of public
buildings (including a university, governor's
mansion, capitol building, orphanage, and insane
asylum). The Vallejo family moved to a new home
in Sonoma, Lachryma Montis (Tear of the Mountain) - Carlos Juan Finlay 1833-1915
13Cuban Epidemiologist
- Carlos Juan Finlay solved the mystery of what
caused yellow fever. This deadly disease had no
known cure just over 100 years ago and killed
thousands of people. - In 1881, he discovered that mosquitoes spread
yellow fever, but he could not prove it. Other
scientist did not believe him and made fun of him
calling him the mosquito man. Eventually, because
of the work that Finaly and Walter Reed, another
important physician, scientists were able to
develop a vaccine using diseased mosquitoes and
conquer this disease. - Finlay was appointed chief of sanitation officer
of Cuba (1902-09), and after his death the Finlay
institute for investigations in Tropical medicine
was created in his honor by the Cuban government. - The Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica. "Carlos
J. Finlay (Cuban Physician)." Encyclopedia
Britannica Online. Encyclopedia Britannica, n.d.
Web. 16 Mar. 2014. - Latinos in Utah
14Strike- breakers and Agricultural
- November 1912- Thousands of Mexicans, most of
them single men, got off the train in Bingham,
Utah. They had come to work in the Utah Copper
mine as strikebreakers. Most were there to
replace miners who were refusing to work until
management improved working conditions and
salaries. Most lived in boardinghouses and sent
money back home to families. The striking miners
despised them for working while they were
striking. Most of them returned home when the
strikes were over. - In the early 20th century many Hispanic/Latinos
came to San Juan County to work with sheep and
other livestock. Many worked on the railroad.
Sugar beet farming drew many Latino families to
northern Utah, especially during World War I. - Taking care of sugar beets is back-breaking work,
from planting, to thinning, to weeding, to
harvesting. Field workers labored long hours in
the heat, bent over most of the day and they
didn't get paid very well. Many pulled their
children out of school to help work. - When things got worse during the Great
Depression, many more Latino workers and their
families left Utah. For those who remained life
was hard. On top of already low wages, falling
prices of sugar beets, Utah experience a drought
in the 1930s. - In the picture to the right you see The Rogue
Garcia Family in Montiello, Utah, in 1927. - "Utah State History." Latinos in Utah. N.p., n.d.
Web. 16 Mar. 2014.
15Latinos in UtahRailroads and Mines
- Large numbers of Latino immigrants worked on the
railroad or in the mines. - Men called traqueros worked in crews that
repaired the rail lines and helped with their
upkeep. Some of their families lived in old rail
cars that weren't being used anymore, next to or
near the tracks. - In Utah during the 1920s and 1930s Utah had set
up their hiring and firing policies based on who
was in the state first. So the earliest settlers
were paid higher wages and were able to work for
job with higher prestige. Then as different
groups settled or moved to Utah they would take
the lowest paying, and most dangerous jobs, such
as mining, agriculture and railroads. - This all came with a lot of resentment and racial
prejudice, usually targeted at the last group
through the door of Utah. So at this time, even
though Utah once belonged to Mexico, one of the
last groups to come in before the Depression was
the Latinos, and they were the first to be fired. - "Utah State History." Latinos in Utah. N.p., n.d.
Web. 16 Mar. 2014.
Traqueros worked to maintain railroad tracks.
16Puerto Ricans
- The onset of World War II disrupted many Latino
families in Utah. The army and navy drafted
husbands and brothers in response, some Latinas
and their daughters moved to Salt Lake City
looking for jobs that allowed them to support
their families. With the shortage of men in the
state led government officials to recruit
hundreds of Puerto Ricans from New York City.
This group of Spanish-speaking people increased
the diversity of the Latino population. Like the
Mexicans of the 1910s, Puerto Ricans of the 1940s
were mainly single males who left their families
behind. - Not accustomed to mine labor or to the
intra-ethnic conflicts with Mexicans, Mexican
Americans, and Spanish Americans, most Puerto
Ricans left the state. Only ten Puerto Rican
families settled down and remained in Utah. These
families became very successful and were able to
buy houses. A few became leaders of the civil
rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s in Utah. - In 1967 there were no more than ten Latino
students at the University of Utah the majority
of them lacked financial support and worked as
busboys in sorority houses as janitors, as
ditch-diggers, for the county or similar jobs.
Mike Melendez, who was born in Bingham Canyon,
later said that his parents only contributed five
or ten dollars per month to his academic
expenses. In spite of these barriers, Melendez
graduated and became a minority adviser at the
University of Utah. As an adviser, he was
especially interested in recruiting Latinas. He
believed education would be an asset to woman in
case something happened to their husbands, and it
was a good thing to pass on to children.
Melendez's mother had been perhaps the first
Latina to graduate from the University of Utah
she obtained a nursing degree in 1942. - Beehive History 25 Families. Salt Lake City, UT
Utah State Historical Society, 1999. Print.
17Latina's in Utah
- Nominated as a Women of Charity, Edith Roblez
Melendez, Prominent civic and community leader,
particularly with regard to Hispanic concerns.
Melendez was integral in the founding of Jordan
School District Cultural Awareness as well as
SOCIO (Spanish Organization for Community,
Integrity, and Opportunity). She was also
Outreach Director for the Utah State Food Stamp
Program, adviser to the University of Utah
College of Sciences program for Ethnic Affairs,
and a member on the Governors Hispanic Council
under Governor Scott Matheson. - Nominated as a Women in the Arts, Ruby Chacon,
Rising Utah artist most notable for her paintings
of the Mexican family, particularly the stories
and traditions of her multicultural background
and -- in Chacón's words -- her experience as a
Utahna, a Chicana, and an Artist. A graduate of
the University of Utah, Chacón has been featured
in many of the states most widely circulated
newspapers, magazines, and books. She also has an
extensive list of gallery shows and exhibitions
in Utah, California, England, and Japan. Chacón
was named one of Salt Lake Tribunes Utahns of
the Year in 2006. She has also received the
Governors Mansion Award and the Mayors Award,
both for visual arts. - Nominated as a Women of Charity, Maria L. Salazar
y Trujillo, Lifelong advocate of foster children
who personally mothered nearly 100 children,
including some with severe behavioral problems,
from the early 1950s until her death in 1987.
Trujillo not only devoted her life to foster
children, she also recruited other foster
mothers. Trujillo was an active member of the
Catholic Women's League and the Third Order of
St. Francis. She was also involved in the early
organization of La Morena Café, which provides
food, fellowship, and job training to vulnerable
citizens as well as funding for other outreach
programs. - Welch, Michele. "Utah Womens Walk." Utah Womens
Walk. Honoring Women in Utah, n.d. Web. 16 Mar.
2014.
18Summary
- This part of the summary is for me. I have
learned more than I bargained for in doing this
assignment. I could have added so many more pages
about the wonderful and amazing Latino people.
Researching about this culture has given me an
insight that I needed in order to become a
Multicultural teacher. I am going to be able to
take away from this project not just knowledge
but a new perspective of how differences can be
made into a positive. After all of the research I
did, the main feelings I have were of sadness,
that we as humans feel we have a right to take
land, voices, languages, heritage, and culture
from certain people. You might notice that I had
a little more information about Vallejo in my
presentation. That was on purpose, I had watched
a video about him and I couldn't help but feel
the sadness he felt at being betrayed by people
he thought were his allies. He had always
considered himself a very hospitable person and
could not imagine that anyone would want to take
from he. He was a generous person who gave a lot
to the community and the land that he loved. It
never even entered his mind that the very people
he was helping was the first to imprison him.
Unfortunately, their story of heartache and
betrayal was all too familiar. Through out
history it seems, there are people who are the
victors and people who are the victims. It is
amazing that even today we have so many trying to
fight for the exact same rights that is entitled
to all, not just some!
19References and Resources
- Vicki Ruiz, Chicano Scholar and historian.
Foreigners in their own land, Latino
Americans,PBS Special Latino Americans Episode 1 - Department of archives and manuscripts, Arizona
State University, Tempe. - Lorenzana, Apolinaria, 1878. Memories de dona
Apolinaria Lorenzana La Beata dictadas por ella
en Sanda Barbara en marzo de 1878 a Thomas
Savage, Bancroft Library. - "San Jancinto Museum of History." San Jacinto
Museum of History. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Mar. 2014. - "Sonoma State University." Mariano Guadalupe
Vallejo North Bay Regional Special
Collections SSU Library. N.p., n.d. Web. 16
Mar. 2014. - "Utah State History." Latinos in Utah. N.p., n.d.
Web. 16 Mar. 2014 - Beehive History 25 Families. Salt Lake City, UT
Utah State Historical Society, 1999. Print. - Welch, Michele. "Utah Womens Walk." Utah Womens
Walk. Honoring Women in Utah, n.d. Web. 16 Mar.
2014. - PBS Latino Americans Episode 1 Foreigners in
their own land - PbS. org